09.08.09

Mike’s Post-Labor Day Muffin Stamp Count

Posted in Mike's posts, The Muffin at 10:25 am by Mike Mitchell

As of September 8, 2009, here are the stamps I have:

  1. California Nat’l Historic Trail (Apr. 2, Apr. 6. Apr. 7). Got this stamp in 2008.
  2. Oregon Nat’l Historic Trail (Apr. 2, Apr. 6, Apr. 7). Same.
  3. Pony Express Nat’l Historic Trail (Apr. 6, Apr. 7). Again.
  4. Mormon Pioneer Nat’l Historic Trail (Apr. 6, Apr. 7). More.
  5. Fossil Butte National Monument (Apr. 2). Ditto.
  6. Western Historic Trails Center, Council Bluffs, IA (Apr. 7)
  7. California Nat’l Historic Trail (Apr. 7).
  8. Oregon Nat’l Historic Trail, Council Bluffs, IA (Apr. 7)
  9. Mormon Pioneer Nat’l Historic Trail (Apr. 7)
  10. Lewis & Clark Nat’l Historic Trail, Iowa (Apr. 7)
  11. Cedar Creek & Belle Grove NHP, Shenandoah Valley, VA (May 10)
  12. Kenilworth Aquatic Gardens, Washington, D.C. (May 23)
  13. National Capital Parks – East, Presidential Inauguration (Jan 2009).
  14. Oxon Cove Park, Underground RR Freedom Network (May 23)
  15. Potomac Heritage NST, Oxon Hill, MD (May 23)
  16. Oxon Cove Park, Oxon Hill, MD (May 23)
  17. Gettysburg NMP, Gettysburg, PA (Jul 15)
  18. Chickasaw NRA, Sulphur, OK (Aug 14)
  19. Wolf Trap NP for the Performing Arts, Vienna, VA (Aug 21)

Sheryl got some of the trail stamps last year when she helped me move out to Utah, but she stuck to her self-imposed rule of not counting stamps that her and Eric don’t get together. This year, when they helped me move back, they got the stamps, again. They’ll count for them, but not for me or Mom.

I went to Fossil Butte last year, but Mom’s visit will count.

I got the Presidential Inauguration stamp because it was limited edition, but I obviously didn’t attend.

The April 7 trail stamps in Council Bluffs Iowa are some of the same ones that we got at trail HQ in Salt Lake City, but the latter are gold-colored and in the Mountain Region, while the Iowa ones are red-colored.

I’m only at 13, with two-thirds of the year done.

09.07.09

Chickasaw NRA Picked as Getaway of the Week after I visit. Coincidence?

Posted in Mike's posts at 9:36 pm by Mike Mitchell

Chickasaw NRA was featured on the NPS website as Getaway of the Week (Week 11: August 31 – September 6) shortly after my visit. Maybe they’re fans of this blog. The text is below, which offers additional tidbits about the park.

Chickasaw National Recreation Area
Oklahoma

At Chickasaw National Recreation Area the power of place is evident: cool creeks flowing over travertine terraces; the silhouette of a great blue heron perched on the shore of the Lake of the Arbuckles; families reuniting in historic campgrounds; locals filling jugs with mineral water; and the idyllic escape so many discover here.

Lying midway between Oklahoma City and Dallas in part of the country that many stereotype as rather unspectacular subprairie scenery, Chickasaw is a conveniently located contrast. Situated just east of Interstate 35 as it transects south-central Oklahoma at the juncture of the southern Osage Plains and the ancient, worn remnants of the Arbuckle Mountains, Chickasaw entertains more than one million visitors each year.

Water defines the park. For over a century, people have come here to enjoy the refreshing, tranquil beauty of this simple wooded valley and its many springs and streams. The reputed healing power of its mineral waters prompted the park’s creation in 1902 as the Sulphur Springs Reservation. The United States Government purchased the land for the new park from the Chickasaw and Choctaw Nations at $20 per acre; making it the first and only national park established at an Indian Tribe’s request. In 1906, the reservation became the nation’s seventh national park, Platt National Park.

Visitors flocked to the new park, and many made annual visits a family tradition. In 1908 over 100,000 visitors were counted at Bromide Spring. To conserve the spring water, only one gallon of water per person per day was allowed without a physician’s prescription.

Between 1933 and 1940, Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) members rebuilt Platt National Park. Rustic buildings, swimming holes, and picnic areas, remain today as a testament to their work. Since then, millions have enjoyed the landscape left behind by the CCC by swimming at Little Niagara, camping at the Cold Springs Campground, or tasting the water at Pavilion Springs.

After 70 years as the smallest national park, Platt National Park was combined with the Arbuckle Recreation Area to create Chickasaw National Recreation Area. The name of the park honors the vision of the Chickasaw Nation. In many respects the modern park is really two parks in one – the Platt Historic District and the Lake of the Arbuckles.

The Lake of the Arbuckles, built in the mid-1960s, offers fun on the water. It’s one of the best fishing lakes in Oklahoma for catfish, perch, bass, and crappie. The Buckhorn and Point campgrounds offer traditional and utility camping sites. Nearby boat ramps provide easy access to the water’s edge, and in areas surrounding the lake some hunting is allowed. In the autumn, the creek-side trails of the Platt Historic District offer an outstanding opportunity to slow down, and exchange the breathtaking vistas and dramatic phenomena of larger national parks, and in their stead delight in quiet, pleasant vignettes of nature’s ageless ways. Come visit — click www.nps.gov/chic/, or call (580) 622-7234.

09.06.09

Winter Vacation Packages in Yellowstone

Posted in Mike's posts at 8:15 pm by Mike Mitchell

I mentioned once before that I would totally like to take a snowmobile tour of Yellowstone.

However, to operate a snowmobile in Yellowstone, on Federal public land, you are supposed to be licensed, from what I remember reading. Talking to some people who have gone up to West Yellowstone for snowmobiling, it sounds like you can…oops, wander on to park land because it’s not well marked if you really want to.

I’m not into that. Anyhow, now that I’m back in Virginia, I’m not sure how I would get a license in Virginia that would qualify to operate a snowmobile (probably via an ATV safety course), so maybe it’d be best to find an alternative for visiting Yellowstone in the winter. There’s a nice set of vacation packages offered by Xanterra Parks & Resorts that just sound like fun. Check these out (winter 2009 prices):

Nordic Heaven at Old Faithful Snow Lodge: includes snowcoach transportation, at least 2 nights lodging, breakfast each day of stay per person, 1 welcome gift per person, 1 ski rental per person per day, unlimited ski drops per person and 1 snow card (discount card) per person which is good for additional 10% discounts on certain gift shop items, additional meals (except designated special events) and any equipment rental. Starts at $339.00 per person double occupancy, $489.00 single occupancy.

Guided Snowmo-Deal at Old Faithful Snow Lodge: includes at least 2 nights lodging, breakfast each day of stay per person, 1 welcome gift per person, 1 snow card per person discount card) per person which is good for additional 10% discounts on certain gift shop items, additional meals (except designated special events), any equipment rental and one guided snowmobile tour to either the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone or Mammoth (snowmobile clothing included in the package). Starts at $389.00 per person double occupancy, $639.00 single occupancy with snowcoach transportation to Snow Lodge.

There are equivalent packages for Mammoth Lodge, and winter packages that split time between the two. It could be really neat. I really need to find someone to do this with.

For the muffin stamp afficionado, the Albright Visitor Center in Mammoth is open year-round, and the Old Faithful Visitor Center has winter hours, too. My guess is that a snowcoach day tour is likely to only give you the opportunity for the Old Faithful stamp unless you do a more elaborate package tour.

Here I thought there’d be other years. Should have done it when I had the chance. Some day I’ll go back, though.

09.03.09

Always Bring Fresh Batteries

Posted in Uncategorized at 11:33 am by Mike Mitchell

About a month ago I visited Spotsylvania Courthouse National Battlefield while on my way down to Richmond. I knew that this battlefield was part of a single Fredericksburg-Spotsylvania Counties park system and didn’t have a visitor facility at the battlefield, but I didn’t want to go out of my way to stop at the Fredericksburg NBP visitor center for the muffin stamp. I was kind of hoping that in the interpretive shelter they might have the stamp and ink pad in a box, like they do at Fort Washington Park, but they don’t. If you want a stamp to mark your visit, you’ll have to stop in the Fredericksburg or Chancellorsville NBP visitor center.

Anyhow, I have always wanted to see this NBP because of all the descriptions of the bloody, protracted hand-to-hand fighting that occurred at the Bloody Angle on May 12th. It’s just one of those things that is hard to imagine. 20 hours! I wanted to see the battlefield for myself in order to try and picture it.

Unfortunately, I can’t provide any photos to help you picture it. My camera batteries were low and my spares had not been charged. The first (and last) photo I took was of this plaque:

To imagine that small arms fire could bring down a 22-inch oak tree might tell all you need to know about the intensity of this battle without other photographs.

To imagine that small arms fire could bring down a 22-inch oak tree might tell all you need to know about the intensity of this battle without other photographs.

…and then my batteries died.

It is an amazing battlefield. On the Confederate lines, can you imagine seeing 20,000 Union troops of the 2nd Corps emerge out of the woods just a few hundred yards in front of you in the early morning mist?

Hiking over to the treeline, can you imagine walking out of the woods that May 12th morning and looking across the terrain and slightly upwards at the Confederate breastworks, bristling with men and cannon?

Casualties were tremendous; regiments were wrecked and yet there is a paucity of monuments at the site. Personally, I expected dozens clustered right there. There are good and bad consequences to that, but that’s a discussion for another post.